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The Enduring Vision, Fifth Edition
Paul S. Boyer, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Clifford E. Clark, Jr., Carleton College
et al.
Identifications
Chapter 22: Global Involvements and World War I, 1902-1920



After reading Chapter 22, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each of the following:

John Hay, the Boxers, and the Open Door policy

Philippe Bunau-Varilla and the Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty

Roosevelt Corollary

gentlemen's agreement

dollar diplomacy

General John J. Pershing in Mexico and Europe

U-boats and unrestricted submarine warfare

Lusitania

National Security League and preparedness

Jane Addams, Carrie Chapman Catt, and the Woman's Peace party

Wilson's Sussex threat and Germany's pledge

Zimmermann telegram

Bernard Baruch and the War Industries Board

Herbert Hoover and the Food Administration

William G. McAdoo and the U.S. Railroad Administration

American Expeditionary Force (AEF)

Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky, and the Bolsheviks

George Creel and the Committee on Public Information

Randolph Bourne

Espionage and Sedition acts, 1917, 1918

Eugene Debs

Schenck v. United States and the "clear and present danger" doctrine

East St. Louis race riot, 1917; Chicago race riot, 1919

Eighteenth and Nineteenth Amendments

Influenza epidemic, 1918

Wilson's fourteen-point peace plan

Treaty of Versailles and Covenant of the League of Nations

Henry Cabot Lodge, reservations, and irreconcilables

Article 10 of the League Covenant

Red Scare, 1919-1920, and the Palmer raids


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